Quote:
Originally Posted by crabbypatty
I think HELOC was the term I was looking for. If rates on a HELOC are variable, that means it won't necessarily beat out a used car loan, right?
I'm looking for the best rate. But maybe a HELOC is more complictaed than I'm willing to get into. I don't understand the difference between borrowing against the home and borrowing against (what?) for a used car loan. Even in the worst absolute case, we are about 60% equity on the home so our home wouldn't be at risk.
You're only using you house to pay for your car if you default though right? It's not like I'd be cashing in equity to hand over for the car. I was thinking the HELOC was a loan aginst the home just in case you can't pay.
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HELOCS are a "second lien" on the house and are "open lines of credit" similar to a credit card. There are good things and bad things about HELOCs.
pro: It's a line of credit with tax deductable interest
pro: it's equity in your house, and not a "fixed" amount per se
con: it allows people to reduce equity to purchase non appreciating assets
con: interest rates are usaully variable
con: terms for a HELOC may not be fully known unless person asks. For example, I had a HELOC on a house which was a 15 yr ARM prime+1 interest rate... and what I learned is payment was interest only for 5 years, then ballooned to a 10 year ammortization payment the last 10. Shame on me for not knowing at the time, I know now.
If you take a second mortgage out (similar but different), once the second mortgage is paid off, you have "no accesss" to the equity until you open a HELOC.
A HELOC to some is an emergency fund. It "can be" $50,000-$100,000 in available credit, which is actually "real assets". The issue is the real asset (house) in generally illiquid.
Costs $50 a year to keep credit line open... and one can tap into it as though it were cash reserves. Gaining a tax deduction in the process.